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SERIES
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ARTICLE
The Study of Butterflies
5. Congregations, Courtship and Migration
Peter Smetacek
Peter Smetacek works on
the taxonomy and zoogeography of Indian
Lepidoptera. He is also
interested in exploring
the potential of Lepidoptera as bio-indicators
of ecological functions
and groundwater.
Part 1. The Naming of Indian Butterflies,
Resonance, Vo1.5,
No.6,pp.8-14, 2000.
Part 2. Flight, Fuels and Senses,
In this part, we examine some causes of congregations, look
at courtship and wonder at migration.
A butterfly is the final stage of a life cycle consisting of an egg,
larva, pupa and adult. In this adult stage, a butterfly has four
main tasks: locating a mate and mating, laying eggs on suitable
substrate, feeding and, of course, surviving long enough to
achieve the first three. Since we are presently not in a position to
attribute consciousness and personality to individual butterflies, we must presume that these tasks are performed according
to genetically encoded behaviour patterns that vary from group
to group, or from species to species and, sometimes, among
individuals within a species.
No.5, pp.8-15, 2002 .
In general, not much is known about the behaviour of Indian
butterflies. It is not that they have not been observed - the point
is, observing something and understanding it are two different
things. For example, it was known for over a c.entury that males
of certain crow and tiger butterflies congregate in swarms on
certain plants, settling on exposed roots, bruised stems or leaves.
The reason did not emerge until, during the second half of the
last century, it was understood that the males, upon emergence
from their pupae, lack certain chemicals essential to the process
of courting females. The swarms consist of males in search of
pyrrolizidine alkaloids that are used to trigger attractants called
pheromones used when the butterflies go a-wooing. Without
these chemicals, females would ignore the males.
Keywords
While on the subject of congregations, some Indian butterflies
like the Crimson Rose (Pachliopta hector), some tigers (Tirumala
and Danaus) and Crows (Euploea) sometimes roost in communes
that may consist of thousands ' of individuals. Such roosts are
Resonance, VoI.S, No.8, pp.4-12,
2000.
Part 3. Intra-specific Variation,
Resonance, Vo1.6, No.5, pp.8-15,
200l.
Part 4. Defences and Defensive
Behaviour, Resonance, VoL7,
Courtship, pheromones, migration, swarming .
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usually on one or a few closely grouped trees or bushes, while
neighbouring vegetation is often entirely without roosting butterflies. So far as is understood, this phenomenon usually occurs
during population outbreaks; at normal densities these species
are content to roost alone. Such roosts are habitual among some
South American butterflies.
At other times, butterflies gather in selected valleys or ravines,
at puddles or on sandbanks and, lastly, on food sources such as
overripe fruit or certain flowers. It is not known why certain
ravines or valleys will, in certain years and only for a week or so,
be filled with butterflies to the extent that they will bump into
one another incessantly, due to lack of space in which to
maneouvre, while surrounding areas 200 m away will have no
more than their usual complement of butterflies at the time. The
unusual thing is that such congregations may consist of over 20
species representing many groups of species except the Swallowtails, who are too restless to stay in one place for long, although
they too pass through the ravine regularly. Such ravines usually
have a water source and are rather shady, but other shady
ravines with water in the area will be found to be almost empty
while one plays host to the swirling swarm. The reason for such
congregations is not understood yet.
A second site of congregations is mUdpuddles and sandbanks
Box 1.
Sometimes, several individuals of a species gather together around a flowering bush or a favourite hilltop.
Some species are more alert than others, being correspondingly more difficult to approach. If one or more
individuals of such a species are taken by a collector, the others will melt away, to return only after the
collector has left. This happens even iftheindividuals taken were collected while the others were soaring
out of sight behind a tree or lower down the hillside.
With less alert species such as whites, the crowd will only move away if the intruder creates consigerable
disturbance, shaking the vegetation or waving the net about.
In the case of the Common Bluebottle Graphium sarpedon, a collector noted "I found it difficult to catch
on the wing as it was very wary and seemed to know how far away (from the net) it was safe and when
I moved behind a tree it would come round the tree to investigate."
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(Figure 1) rich in certain minerals required
by male butterflies for the formation of spermatophores (see Part 2 of this series). Such
groups consist of several hundred individuals at most. Bird droppings and mammilian
urine also attract certain species, presum..
ably due to the presence of minerals such as
sodium.
Figure 1. A small congregation of Browns (Satyrinae) on a streambed. Thirteen individuals of four
species have gathered.
Such gatherings can consist of hundreds of individuals.
Butterflies are rather
specific in their
requirements:
species that prefer
flowers will very
rarely, if ever, be
found on overripe
fruit.
A third cause of congregations is food,
whether flower nectar, overripe fruit, a rotting carcass or a
cowpat. Each source attracts nu~ber of particular types of
butterflies. In the case of flowers and other sources or sugars like
fruit and tree-sap, both sexes are attracted indiscriminately but
in the case of cowpats and rotting carcasses, it is more often the
males that are attracted. Butterflies are rather specific in their
requirements: species that prefer flowers will very rarely, if ever,
be found on overripe fruit. The mudpuddlers also avoid tree sap
and overripe fruit while the majority of flower visitors avoid
cowpats, carcasses as well as mudpuddles. Even among flowers,
there are less than a handful that are universally popular. Usually, each flower has a certain group of butterflies among whom
it is popular. Such groups sometimes consist of closely related
species of one or more genera; in other cases, species from
different families will congregate on a particular flower species.
In all such congregations, no particular i~ter-butterfly communication, apart from the usual push-and-shove, has been observed either between members of a single species or of different
species.
The only known inter-butterfly communication is during the
process of courtship, which is so elaborate in some species that it
leaves a niggling doubt whether these creatures are really as
uncommunicative the rest of the time as we believe. Each group
has its own ritual, which usually begins when the sexes spot each
other. Recognition of mates of the same species is based on sight
and smell, involving the colour and pattern on the wings, and
chemicals called pheromones, respectively.
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It should be noted that the words 'sight' and 'smell' are used for
want of more specific terms. Butterflies cannot 'see' things the
way we do, since they do not have such sophisticated eyes. What
they do have are compound eyes, each containing from 2,60018,200 facets in different species. It is believed that they 'see' a
fuzzy picture of the world since the lenses are fixed and cannot
change shape or position to bring objects into sharp focus.
Similarly, regarding 'smell',· we know that flowers release perfume to attract insects while insects release phermones to attract
mates. We know in the case of certain moths, that a drop or two
of the pheromone released by a female can attract males from
over ten kilometres away downwind. The antennae appear to be
the sensory organs involved, but it is not certain whether the
molecules of the perfumes or pheromones are perceived by the
insect's brain as a 'smell' comparable with our sense of the same
name or in some other manner outside our experience. When we
consider how butterflies manoeuvre through dense vegetation
at relatively high speed, it is difficult to believe that their senses
are poorly developed. There is no doubt that the antennae house
more than just the sense of 'smell', for a butterfly deprived of one
antenna will go blundering about, bumping into objects and
flying lopsided in a manner that causes one to realise how perfect
the in-flight manoeuvering is at other times.
In the case of
certain moths, a
drop or two of the
pheromone
released by a
female can attract
males from over
ten kilometres
away downwind.
To return to the process of courtship, each group has its own
ritual. Males of some species stake out a patch, often along a well
used path or a clearing in a forest. They patrol the patch day after
day, challenging any other butterfly or, indeed, any creature
that comes near the patch that even vaguely resembles the
species. Even small birds are chased by some species of butterflies, although the birds practically ignore such 'attacks'. Often,
the butterfly flies rapidly towards an intruder but if it is ~f a
different species, it returns to its perch without further ado.
Sometimes, there is an intentional mid-air collision, with a
resounding thwack that can be heard several metres away. Such
jousts usually result in the intruder fleeing, with the defender in
hot pursuit. It soon returns to its beat, which it first checks to
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SERIES I ARTICLE
Box 2
It sometimes happens that individuals of different species mate. While it has not been observed in nature
so far, in extensive breeding experiments carried out on Swallowtails Pap iii 0 , one instance of a
spontaneous pairing between two different species was observed in a greenhouse. Hybrids can be obtained
by hand pairing of different species, but so far no such butterfly hybrid has proved capable of producing
fertile offspring.
In nearly every case of hand pairing of different species, the offspring bore traces of both the parents on
its wings. Therefore, if inter-specific mating occurred in nature on a regular basis, specimens of such
pairings would no doubt exist in collections. A few possible hybrids between different Arabian Colotis
species have been recorded, but the better known exception that proves the rule is from the lowlands of
Sikkim, where two well known Swallowtails, the Great Mormon Papilio memnon and the South Indian
Blue Mormon Papilio polymnestoroccurtogether. Forms intermediate between the two species have been
obtained, suggesting that the two species occasionally mate in nature. In is not known whether such
possible hybrids were fertile or not.
There is an interesting case of the pairing of two species of giant silkmoths (Saturniidae). The species
concerned are Anthraea perneyi of China and Anthraea roylei of the Himalaya. They produced a hybrid
which bore characters of both parents and produced fertile offspring. A controversy immediately arose
during the 1970's, since one group raised the hybrid to the status ofa species, calling it Anthraea proylei.
This was opposed by taxonomists, who refused to treat proylei as anything more than a hybrid. They
maintained that despite the fact that proylei bred true, i.e. proylei parents produced proylei offspring, not
perneyi or roylei offspring, it was nevertheless a hybrid, an artificial creation that would not necessarily
be stable in nature. Today, proylei is not considered a species. The name is still used to refer to the hybrid
in tasar silk producing circles, where the moth is extensively used.
Figure 2. Mating Orange
Staff Sergeants: the female
has her wings open. In the
event of being disturbed,
she will fly while the male
hangs prone.
confirm that no other butterfly has, in the meantime occupied it.
The patrolling then continues, up and down the beat, with the
butterfly often settling on a perch which commands the beat.
The perch is rarely an individual choice. During the last century, a writer noted for a rather pugnacious species, the Orange
Staff Sergeant (Figure 2), 'a male caught on a leaf there
was an hour later replaced by another male on the same
leaf. I have noted the same thing in a number of other
species; where, if a fresh male manages to drive off a
worn male, it sits on the same perches as the previous
individual. Year after year, the same species take up the
same beats, making it possible to find them easily once
one knows the area.
However, there is more to the whole thing than merely
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Figure 3. The female Brimstone butterfly, settled on
the leaf with outspread
wings, raises her abdomen
out ofreach of the hovering
male to signal her unwillingness to mate.
All photo credits: Peter Smetacek
the defence of a beat. There comes a time in the life of a butterfly
when the long awaited female appears. The defender approaches
her with the usual exuberance but, instead of knocking her
about and chasing her, he circles her and, in the language of the
air force, forces her down to land, occasionally jostling her in
mid-air if she attempts to flee. If she is determined to flee, he has
no qualms about knocking her from above, forcihg her lower
and lower until she is forced to settle.
Once the female has settled, willingly or unwillingly, courtship
begins in earnest. Many species of male butterflies have greasy
looking patches of specialised scales on their wings (see Part 2 of
this series). It is believed that these scales are used mainly to
exude a scent which stimulates the female sexually. The female's
sensory organs appear to be located in her antennae, for the
males of some species attempt to rub their patches of specialised
scales on the antennae of the female. If the female's reaction is
positive, the male lines up the tip of his abdomen with hers and
mating commences, a process that may last for an hour or so. In
this period, if the couple is disturbed, it is usually the female that
flies off, carrying the unmoving male with her, still attached to
the tip of her abdomen. Sometimes, it is the male that carries the
female. It is worth noting in passing that butterflies are capable
of flring with double their weight, although not very fast or far.
If the female's response is negative, she has several options for
brushing off the male's advances. If she is on a bush or tree, she
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may simply drop down from the perch where she was forced to
land by the attending male. In doing so, she does not open her
wings or attempt to glide, but merely drops like an inanimate
object. Else, she may open her wings and raise her abdomen so
that the tip is quite out of reach of the male (Figure 3). Lastly, she
may simply fly off, to be forced down again and again until the
male's persistence wears off and he returns to his beat.
All this elaborate process is eliminated in some species. The
Grass Yellows (Eurema spp). for example, are common butterflies, very similar to the Nilgiri Grass Yellow illustrated in Part
1 of this series. They tend to swarm in som~ localities and are
gregarious in their early stages, which means that the caterpillars and pupae 'hang out together' on or near their larval host
plants. Having hung together in the pupal stage, they also
emerge together, within a few hours or days of each other. In
South India, it was discovered that the males, instead of chivalrously waiting for the females to reach a stage where their
consent became a matter of uncertainty, simply went and mated
wi th them as soon as they emerged from their pupae, before their
wings had dried out and, in some cases, before they had even
expanded!
Migration
The best known
example of butterfly
migration is that of
the North American
Monarch, that
migrates from
Canada and the
northern USA to
Mexico in autumn
and undertakes the
return journey in
spring.
The best known example of butterfly migration is that of the
North American Monarch, that migrates from Canada and the
northern USA to Mexico in autumn and undertakes the return
journey in spring. In the Old World, perhaps the best known
example is the Painted Lady Cynthia cardui, that undertakes
large scale migrations from North Africa to Europe, sometimes
reaching as far north as the Arctic Circle. Migrations of this
butterfly have also been recorded in India, but these do not
involve numbers as large as those from North Africa to Europe.
In India C. cardui migrates in a north westerly direction in the
Himalaya during spring, but generally in small numbers. Larger
migrations also occur in the Western Ghats, but not regularly.
The Peablue Lampides boeticus migrates in very large numbers
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every spring in the Himalaya. It, too, travels in a north westerly
direction but so far, it is not known what causes these flights or
where they end. In the Palni Hills of South India, the same
butterfly migrates in a north easterly direction in spring. In
southern India, butterfly migrations have been documented in
the Palni Hills. Twenty two species are known to migrate,
travelling southwards in October and November during the
rainy season. In February and March, Albatrosses Appias and
Emigrants Catopsilia travel northwards and the same two genera
migrate again during May and June, but in no particular direction. There are scattered reports of migrations from other parts
of India, mainly Assam, the Western Ghats and Rajasthan, but
these are not regular, either with regard to species or timing.
Most butterflies
known to migrate are
widespread, that is,
they are found over
vast tracts of land,
although they might
not breed in all the
areas where they are
found. They generally
exhibit very little
geographical
variation.
Dispersal of the species is speculated to be a major purpose of
migration. Most butterflies known to migrate are widespread,
that is, they are found over vast tracts of land, although they
might not breed in all the areas where they are found. They
generally exhibit very little geographical variation. A good example is the Painted Lady, which is found in Asia, Europe, parts
of Africa and most of North America. Throughout this range,
there are no geographical races: a butterfly obtained in India is
practically indistinguishable from a North American specimen.
Similarly, the Peablue, which occurs from Europe to Japan,
throughout Africa and from South Asia to Australia has no
described geographical races.
However, not all widespread butterflies are migrants. Species
such as the Copper Lycaena phlaeas, which is known from Europe, Africa, throughout temperate Asia to North America is
not known to migrate and has numerous described geographical
races.
The most obvious cause of migrations is a rapid expansion of the
population of one or more species in an area, which leads to a
reduced food supply and a subsequent exodus in search of food.
Most of the migrations of the Painted Lady can be traced to this
cause. Such migrations are usually sporadic, owing their origin
The most obvious
cause of migrations
is a rapid expansion
of the population of
one or more species
in an area, which
leads to a reduced
food supply and a
subsequent exodus
in search of food.
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In the Himalaya, a
seasonal migration
has been noted.
Cabbage Whites
(Pieris) , that are
almost exclusively
hill insects, descend
to the adjoining
plains during the
winter, to raise a
brood which returns
to the hills the
following spring.
to abnormal circumstances. In other cases, such as the Peablue
or Albatrosses, the lack of food does not seem to be the prime
cause. Perhaps it is merely a genetic programme that enables the
species to colonise vast areas. Whatever the reason, the Peablue
is certainly a common butterfly over the range it inhabits.
In the Himalaya, a seasonal migration has been noted. Cabbage
Whites (Pieris), that are almost exclusively hill insects, descend
to the adjoining plains during the winter, to raise a brood which
returns to the hills the following spring. Such migrants have
been recorded as far away as Delhi, but it is not known whether
the succeeding generation of the Delhi records would be in a
position to return to the hills or whether they would perish in
the heat of the plains during summer.
Butterflies are capable of travelling great distances. In the course
of migrations, they regularly traverse continents. However, these
journeys are undertaken over a period of days or weeks. A more
remarkable achievement is the irregular appearance of North
American butterflies on European shores, which involves a
trans-Atlantic crossing. The Monarch and the Buck-eye (Vanessa
virginiensis) have both established populations on the Canary
Islands off the European coast, while the Monarch has also
established itself in Australia. It is one of the mysteries of the
butterfly world how the Coppers, that are found in <-Europe,
temperate Asia and North America, reached New Zealand in the
dim past, having speci~ted there in the meantime. Or how the
two endemic butterfly species of Hawaii reached there from
Asia, where their congeners live.
That such long flights in insects are possible was proved recently when a part of a swarm of locusts that started off from the
west coast of Africa reached the coast of South America, after a
seventeen hour non-stop flight over the southern Atlantic Ocean!
Address for Correspondence
Peter Smetacek
Jones Estate
P.O. Bhimtal, Nainital
Ut1aronchal 263 136, India.
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